Kosher Restaurants in Los Angeles
Greater Los Angeles is home to one of the largest kosher dining scenes in the United States, concentrated in the Pico-Robertson and Fairfax/La Brea corridors and across the San Fernando Valley (Encino, Tarzana, Sherman Oaks and the North Hollywood/Valley Village area). Options span glatt-kosher meat grills and Israeli, Persian and Chinese restaurants alongside cholov-yisrael dairy pizzerias, cafes and bakeries. Most establishments are certified by the Rabbinical Council of California (RCC), with additional supervision from Kosher LA, Kehilla Kosher and national agencies.
Kosher eateries cluster on W. Pico Blvd (Pico-Robertson), Beverly Blvd/Fairfax/La Brea, and Ventura Blvd through the Valley (Encino, Tarzana, Sherman Oaks). Nearly all kosher restaurants close for Shabbat from Friday afternoon through Saturday night and on Jewish holidays; hours are reduced on Fridays and after fast days. Verify current supervision on the certifying agency's teudah before dining.
Kosher restaurants by neighborhood
Showing 49 to 72 of 76. Filter by type using the menu above.
Continental Kosher Bakery
San Fernando Valley
Fish In the Village
San Fernando Valley
Hatikva Grill Express
San Fernando Valley
Hollywood Falafel
San Fernando Valley
Hummus Yummy
San Fernando Valley
Le Sushi
San Fernando Valley
Melrose Burgers Encino
San Fernando Valley
Nataly's Acai
San Fernando Valley
PSY Street Kitchen
San Fernando Valley
Popular
San Fernando Valley
Renaissance Bakery
San Fernando Valley
Roladin
Bakery / Cafe · San Fernando Valley
TLV Tapas Bar
San Fernando Valley
Tasty Kosher Kitchen
San Fernando Valley
Tel Aviv Chef Kitchen
San Fernando Valley
Tel Aviv Grill
San Fernando Valley
Tel Aviv Grill Woodland Hills
San Fernando Valley
Tel Aviv Grill-Valley Village
San Fernando Valley
Unique Café
San Fernando Valley
Beverly Hills Thai
Beverly Hills
Erin McKenna's Bakery
Fairfax / La Brea
Eilat Bakery Café
Pico-Robertson
Jeff's Gourmet Sausage Factory
Pico-Robertson
SmashHouse Burgers LA
Pico-Robertson
Compiled from the certifying agencies and public kosher directories. Where the specific hechsher is unconfirmed, a listing is shown as "Kosher". Kosher status can change, so always confirm the teudah on site.